Found this Proust Geometrica Chair by Alessandro Mendini at twentytwentyone, a worthwile site to explore.
Perillo Chair by Martin Ballendat at 2011 IMM Cologne (2)
Perillo Chair by Martin Ballendat. It was awarded with a 2009 Red Dot award.
Update: As indicated in the comments: Probably inspired by Pierre Paulin’s Ribbon Chair
Update 2: About Martin Ballendat:
DIPL. DES. MARTIN BALLENDAT
1958 born in Bochum
1983 diploma for Industrial Design at the university Folkwangschule, Essen
1983 – 1986 designer for the company Sedus, Waldshut
1995 head of the department design and product development for the company Wiesner Hager, Austria
Since 1995 independet design studio with 16 staff members and 2 locations in Germany and AustriaActive for more than 30 well known brands in 13 countries:
Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Netherlands, United Kingdom, USA, Poland, France, Thailand, Egypt, Japan and Turkey
Most important references: Dauphin (GER), Team 7 (AUT), Brunner (GER), Tonon (I), Züco (SUI), Mobica (EGY), Lucaris Glass (THA)
For more than 15 years lecturer and visiting professor at the university of applied sciences in the field of design in Graz and SalzburgMore than 100 design prizes and other rewards, among them: 25x Red Dot (2x Best of the Best), 13x IF-Award, Best of Neocon Chicago Gold and Silver,
Good Design Award, Best of the Best Interieur Innovations Award, Focus LGA Stuttgart in Gold and Silver, Design Plus Award, Materialica Award,
IIDEX Gold Award Canada, National Award Saarland and further prizes in Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Japan, China, Hungary and many moremember of the Rotary Club
married, four children
Source: Ballendat.com
Butter Stools by Tjep
Since we published the Cake Stool (Let Them Sit Cake) recently, we cannot leave the Butter Stools by Tjep without attention.
the moulds themselves melt because of the temperature during solidification. A technical story, but the result is that every piece gets a unique soft buttery structure. Haven’t you ever fantasized melting away in your furniture?
Distortion #6 by ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ
And another image for the series Chairchez la Femme.
ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ
Distortion #6, Paris, 1933
Gelatin silver print, printed 1933 by the artist in Paris from the original glass plate negative. 9 1/4 x 6 7/8 in. (23.5 x 17.5 cm). Numbered ‘6’ twice in an unidentified hand in pencil, ink, and copyright credit stamp on the verso.
ESTIMATE $30,000-40,000
SOLD AT $42,500
Yabaco Chair by Zalabatta
Zalabatta (Ryann Aoukar & Damien Robache) designed this Yabaco Chair for Canadian Based Nienkämper.